Colorado leaders travel to Houston to gain insight into homelessness

Metro Denver area officials are in Houston to study how to solve homelessness

Denver metro area leaders turned to Texas in hopes of gaining insight into how to deal with an issue impacting most major metropolitan areas: homelessness. Figures show Houston is leading the country in dealing with the issue.

In the past decade, the city has moved 25,000 people off the streets and into housing.

CBS

Among those who traveled to learn how to do it, is Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman.

"Well, I think we are looking at a very unique model for reducing homelessness. The success certainly has been recognized nationally with Houston as a way forward," said Coffman. 

The Denver metro delegation includes not just Aurora, but Arapahoe and Adams counties and the City of Denver. 

CBS

They listened to presentations from Houston authorities. What they heard was about a cooperative program between agencies and areas in trying to get people into housing.

"By using hotels and other properties as temporary bridges to something more permanent, we can do a better job of moving people off the streets into stable housing and not just to encampments down the street."

It comes as Denver's Mayor Michael Hancock announced $254 million in his budget for affordable housing and dealing with homelessness.

In Houston, they have cut red tape, bypassed shelters and moved those in need from the streets directly into a home. 

The Denver metro delegation will discuss the trip next Monday at 6:30 p.m. at the Aurora City Council study session. 

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